Sara Whitten: Turning Tears Into Wells
Apr 25, 2026
A Lesson from the Wrong Bible Story My husband's and my younger children have a book of Bible story-based encounters that I enjoy reading from every now and then. In the spirit of remembering Jesus' resurrection recently, I had pulled out the book to read what I assumed would be an experience of Jesus' resurrection, because the chapter was titled "The Rolled Away Stone." As I began to read the story (which is written as if you're part of the experience), I was hurrying to a tomb when I came upon a weeping Jesus. I stopped. Wait a minute, weeping Jesus? This was Lazarus' resurrection! I had mistakenly turned to the wrong Bible story. The Holy Spirit drew my attention to the similarities: the tears, the tomb, the stone rolled away, the miraculous turnaround, and revival of hope.
When I dug deeper into this verse, I found there was a thing called a "nod" in ancient Israel that was a sheep or goat skin bottle made to hold liquids for travelers. These "bottles" or "nods" that Psalm 56:8 refers to prevented any leakage, resisted decay, and preserved precious liquids from evaporating. I thought this was interesting, because it showed tears as being carried on a journey. (Photo via Pexels) Redeeming Our Tears We don't often think of tears as the beginning of a movement but as a reaction to an ending. In God's Kingdom, tears can also mean a journey has begun. Tears in this verse were also carried in a vessel that prevented decay. Decay is a function of time. That means the redemption for our tears doesn't have an expiration. God can redeem tears no matter how "old" they are. Finally, nothing is lost. It's a promise that not one tear falls through the cracks. He accounts for it all. Tears aren't needless to God. They are precious. I heard in the Spirit, "When I'm involved, tears always become a rolled-away stone." The tears before Lazarus and the tears in Gethsemane both ended in a rolled-away stone. Initially, I thought of the obvious meaning of a rolled-away stone. It was the raising of the dead, revival of the hopeless, and manifestation of the impossible. The things we had given up on or seen as too far gone were making a glorious turnaround. But the Lord told me to look at stones in His word.
Trade Your Tears for a Well of Revival Shepherds of ancient Israel knew that rolled-away stones held wells behind them to water their sheep. When Jesus rolls away a stone, He not only dries our tears, but He opens a well to water us (His sheep). The Lord invites us to trade our tears for a well of revival! You can come back to a well. You can draw from a well over and over again. Every turnaround He does becomes a well from which we can be watered from time and time again. It also becomes a source from which we can water His sheep. The testimony of your turnaround will satisfy those thirsty for hope. Whatever part of the process you're in—the tears, the turnaround, or the well—know that it has value. Encounter the Lord in that place, because when Jesus is involved, tears turn into wells. Ask God: • Father, what hopeless "tombs" in my life do You have a turnaround planned for? • Holy Spirit, what hope do You want to fill me with from Your well? • Jesus, in what ways are You using me and my testimonies as a well for Your sheep?
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Sara Whitten Sara Whitten is an author, speaker, and founder of Arrows of Zion Ministries which has been offering resources to equip to the body of believers since 2017. This ministry focuses on creating space to regularly encounter God's voice and live lives that are fertile soil for the kingdom of God. Her writings are featured in many publications, including the Elijah List and Charisma. She also hosts "Hear God Every Day," a podcast with tools to help amplify the voice of God amidst the noise of everyday life. She and her husband currently reside in Kerrville, Texas with their three children.
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